But patterns are nothing more than what humans perceive is beautiful, — Gregory
But how do we know the pattern is not controlling us? — Gregory
The word "random" is used in two very related ones. It can mean "spontaneous action" such that world seems to act as if it has free will but no consciousness, and it can mean irregular patterns. I am wondering if the latter is based on anything objective. We all have different tastes in physical appearances. Someone might seem beautiful to someone else, but not to a third person. We all have different tastes in art and music as well. Further, autistic people see patterns within disorder. What is one person's order is another person's mess. Therefore, IQ tests seem to measure how a person scores within an arbitrarily assigned range of what is "smart". If I have a sequence 2,4,8 and ask what comes next, any answer can be right. What if it is the law of the human nature that after two doublings you multiply by 100. The answer would be 800. What if that was the law of just some peoples' genes? They would score low on an IQ test. But the IQ test is not objective then. If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, than so is order.
In conclusion, is chaos theory all bunk? — Gregory
Chaos behavior is about "patterns" in randomness. How could "some outcomes are more likely even in a completely random system".? I think we sense patterns based on beauty only. If I cut a square into four triangles, can you prove it has more "pattern" than a white sheet of paper with one dot in the corner? Is it more patterned if the dot is in the middle? If beauty is in the soul of the beholder, then even pattern might not inherently out there. — Gregory
Secondly, the only subject that studies patterns seriously is math and I don't know if there's a subfield devoted to just the study of patterns or not. — TheMadFool
Chaos theory is about sensitivity to initial conditions. Vary them a tiny bit and you might end up in Bakerstreet instead of Trafalgar Square — Haglund
To Mathematicians
Is Chaos Theory (math) an admission that the calculations involved are too complex for humans and current top-of-the-line supercomputers (extremely difficult to predict) or is the claim that there's true randomness (unpredictability). — Agent Smith
Can you zoom in like in those colored fractal zoomings (where the colors represent a rate of convergence, if Im not mistaken)? — Haglund
↪jgill
Impressive. This is yours? — Banno
Begin with a number between 0 and 1 in the first cell. Next cell = previous cell x (1 - previous cell) x some constant between 2 and 4. — Cuthbert
Somehow they seem to eat each other. Raw sex in the complex plane... — Haglund
I guess it pales in the face of your accident about 35 years ago... — Haglund
↪jgill
Looks very Mayan! Perhaps its just the combination of color and the swirling motif. — Agent Smith
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